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Bible Overview is a wonderful resource for anyone interested in Bible study. Each month we feature a book of the Bible (in order) by Bible scholar and lecturer, Mary Jane Chaignot.
This month has three entries, Haggai, Zechariah, and Malachi, whose writings complete the works of The Minor Prophets. It is generally assumed that these three were all post-exilic prophets. Their worldview was radically and forever altered by the events in 587 BCE, when Jerusalem fell to the Babylonians. It is possible that Haggai and Zechariah might have been alive at that time, though scholars cannot know that for certain. They both devoted their ministries to the rebuilding of the temple, to restoring proper worship, and to assuring the people of their unbroken relationship with God. Malachi, speaking another generation later, knew the rebuilt temple was not the final answer. The people still had a responsibility to conduct their lives in a manner consistent with their status of being God’s chosen people. And he tried hard to make that happen, all the while knowing that the Israelite community was still a “work in progress.” Thus it is that Malachi’s final words look forward – to the future, to the messenger who would be the forerunner of the Messiah yet to come. If you want to read some of the history previous to this selection, you can find the earlier books in our archives.
The Bible Time-Line is another quick reference for locating individuals or specific books. We encourage readers to share their Bible Study success stories on this site. Email us at overview@biblewise.com to be included on next month's site.
Zechariah
Zechariah and Haggai were contemporaries, though neither mentions the other. It is believed that Zechariah began his work during the second month of Haggai’s four-month ministry and continued for a few years thereafter. They were both dealing with the same political situation, and both were interested in the building of the temple. But that’s where the similarity ends. Haggai was very practical-minded and his message was straightforward: build God’s house. Zechariah, on the other hand, experienced God through visions. Many of these were interpreted for his benefit by an accompanying angel. Because he was a visionary, a lot of his words are very obscure. Nonetheless, it is the book of Zechariah (among the Minor Prophets) that is most often quoted in the New Testament, so it was well known. And, no doubt, during the times of the New Testament, writers could identify with his message.
There is considerable discussion regarding the unity of this book. The first eight chapters contain specific visions and are generally related to the rebuilding of the temple, but chapters 9-14 are quite different in style and substance. Many scholars have determined these later chapters to be the work of a different author, written perhaps a century or two later. Against this argument is the fact that the earliest surviving manuscript (found among the Dead Sea Scrolls) shows no break between chapters 8 and 9. Like so many other books, regardless of whether or not it began as a unified whole, some later redactor put both sections together on purpose. That editor clearly thought they belonged together.
Like Haggai, Zechariah opens his ministry with prophecies regarding the temple. But unlike Haggai, he seems to have a much greater perspective on what that rebuilding meant. Whereas Haggai predicted Zerubbabel would usher in the messianic age upon the temple’s completion, Zechariah’s visions were timeless. He saw the restoration of God’s people occurring in the very process of building the temple. It wasn’t something that would be signified by its completion, but something that was happening stone by stone.
As a result, God becomes more transcendent in this book. No longer does God speak directly through prophets, and no longer do they contend with Him directly (as Habakkuk had done). This God speaks through angels and interpreters. His words are for a future forever. The messianic age that Haggai foresaw approaching in the immediate future is slowed way down. Zechariah had a larger vision of what needed to be done by the people before they should even think about such a thing happening to them. He believed in the need for purification, social justice, and sincerity. Society had to do a lot more to prepare itself for this event. He also took into consideration the fact that many Jews now lived outside of Palestine. And while he embraced them wholeheartedly, the fact that they lived among Gentiles caused some ambivalence regarding the other nations. This is one of the issues addressed in the final chapters of the book.
The people who lived during this latter time were having a different world experience than the one in which Zechariah lived. Even though the Persians were marching toward Egypt during the sixth century, Zechariah was convinced they would not be harmed. It was a semblance of peace – guaranteed as long as they maintained loyalty to Persia. The writer of the second section, however, describes a more tenuous existence. The people were in deep despair. Beset on all sides, they looked to God to save them from destruction, hence the messianic overtones. God’s rescue would come amidst cataclysmic upheavals. The overturning that is described in the last chapters is that once-and-for-all, end-of-the-world, apocalyptic vision. And only then will there be peace.
The book is generally divided into two main sections, chapters 1-8 -- Visions and Oracles of Zechariah; 9-14 -- Messianic Future and Realized Eschatology. |
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| I – 1:1-8:23 – Visions and Oracles of Zechariah |
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| 1:1 |
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Introduction
October-November 520 BCE
Word of the Lord came to Zechariah |
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| 1:2-6 |
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Lessons from the past; A call for repentance
“Return to me and I will return to you”
The Lord had turned away from their covenant-breaking ancestors
They had been warned to turn from their evil ways
They had not listened; and now where are they?
God implores: Do not be like your forefathers; God’s words will be fulfilled
Zechariah pleads for wholehearted response to the Lord |
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| 1:7-6:8 |
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A series of night visions (Eight in all, Date: February 15, 519 BCE) |
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1:1-17 First Vision – Horseman Among the Trees
Rider on a red horse, with three other horses behind
him
Horsemen are scouts sent by God to patrol the earth
World was at peace, but God heard the cry of
Jerusalem
Nations had punished Jerusalem excessively
God will have compassion on Jerusalem; he has not abandoned them
1:18-21 Second Vision – Four Horns
Four horns represent the four nations that had
scattered Jerusalem
(Possibly Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome)
Four craftsmen were approaching to overthrow the “horns”
Their job is to punish the powers that went beyond
God’s limits in dealing with Jerusalem
2:1-13 Third Vision – City with no Walls
2:1-5 Sees a surveyor with a measuring stick
Plan is to measure Jerusalem
City will have huge population and will be protected by God
City will have no need for walls
(Might have been in response to those who worried that they should fix the city walls
before working on the temple)
2:6-13 International homecoming for those who
had been scattered
Exiles will return from all corners of the
world
Gentiles will also join them and become people of God
God will be present in the midst of all of
them, embrace all
3:1-10 Fourth Vision – Joshua (current High Priest) and Satan
Courtroom scene – High priest stands before God and Satan
Joshua stands before them in filthy garments
Representative of the suffering people
God states people have suffered enough
Orders angel to clothe Joshua with clean, rich
apparel
Oracle to Joshua: observe the law and you will rule
with authority
Basically people are given a brand new start, past
sins are wiped out
4:1-14 Fifth Vision – Lampstand of Pure Gold
Lampstand had a bowl with seven lamps each
having seven spouts
Two trees stood one on each side
“Seven” symbolized perfection
God’s perfect eyes (lamps) are watching them
Seven spouts might indicate limitless supply of oil
(God’s power is unlimited)
Two trees represent the two leaders, Joshua and Zerubbabel
Both will have a role in new government
Purpose of vision was to provide encouragement for completion of temple
Once again, God will supply the Spirit for the work
5:1-4 Sixth Vision – The Flying Scroll
It was thirty feet long and fifteen feet wide (big enough
for all to read)
Indication of need for spiritual renewal
Those who break the covenant will continue to suffer
Scroll apparently related to third and eighth commandments
Third: keep holy the Sabbath
Eighth: do not bear false witness
Both are central to the keeping of the covenant
5:5-11 Seventh Vision – Woman in a Basket
Wickedness (personified by a woman) was covered in
a basket
Two winged women take basket to Babylon
God takes initiative in removing wickedness from the land
Basket is permanently sealed
Wickedness must be removed, not “managed”
6:1-15 Eighth Vision – Four Chariots
6:1-8 Mission of the four horses
Four horses are different colors, about to
set off on worldly mission
Go to the four corners of the earth
Mission is to establish God’s peace over the earth
(All these visions still involve building of the temple. Idea seems to be that by rebuilding
the temple, the Kingdom of God will be
renewed throughout the world.)
6:9-15 Oracle regarding Joshua
Zechariah was to take gold and silver
brought by Josiah
Fashion a crown for Joshua (like a
coronation)
Then Joshua would crown Zerubbabel
King and Priest together would rule
Only value was symbolic. Persia would not allow a real “king”
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| 7:1-8:14 |
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Sermons of Zechariah -- December 7, 518 BCE |
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7:1-7 Questions re fasting
Involves fasting in remembrance of destruction of Jerusalem
Does this involve having a pity-party or true repentance?
Fasting should be directed to a spiritual goal not self satisfaction
Ritual without moral integrity is meaningless
7:8-14 Remembering the reasons for the exile
Recalling the past will be understood as warning for
the present
Obeying the letter of the law without the spirit
Listed four tests for spiritual reality
Are they administering true justice?
Are they showing mercy and compassion?
Are they oppressing others – widows, poor, or
foreigners?
Are they thinking evil?
Ancestors refused to obey these commands, were scattered
It could happen again
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| 8:1-17 |
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Restoration of Israel
Oracle specifying God’s blessings
New character for Jerusalem, land of peace, children can play
People will be regathered; God will be their God, they will be his people
Point of all this is to encourage people to keep working on temple
Reasons for past discouragements have passed |
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| 8:18-23 |
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Joyful fasts, glad occasions, and happy festivals!
Mourning and their position in the world will be reversed
Not only will they have joy, but they will also be source of blessing for Gentiles
All peoples will go to Jerusalem to participate in worship of one true God
“In those days ten men from all languages and nations will take firm hold of one Jew by the hem of his robe and say, ‘Let us go with you, because we have heard that God is with you.’”
They will see the holiness and godliness of Jews and want to join with them
God’s saving work includes all |
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| II – 9:1-14:21 – Messianic Future and Realized Eschatology |
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| 9:1-11:17 |
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First Oracle: The Coming of the King |
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9:1-10:1 Restoration of Davidic Kingdom
9:1-8 Great military campaign
Judgments that will accompany the messianic age
Oracles against various foreign nations
After crushing foreign nations, God will reside by Jerusalem
9:9-10 The Coming of Jerusalem’s King
City will rejoice at the advance of its king
“Riding on a colt the foal of an ass”
Weapons will be abandoned in light of peace
Peace will extend throughout the world
Dawning of a new age
9:11-10:1 Deliverance and blessing of the people
Before there can be peace, there must
be full deliverance
God is up to the task – prisoners will
be freed
Much battle terminology – bow, sword, arrow, trumpet
But God will give them the victory
With deliverance comes blessing
God controls the fields, rain (crops will
be plentiful)
10:2-12 Return to the homeland
Warning to the idolatrous leaders
Household gods, diviners are unreliable
God’s anger burns against the shepherds for not caring for people
Therefore, he will take care of them himself
“I will have compassion on them…I am the Lord
their God”
11:1-17 The rejection by the shepherds
11:1-3 Collapse of the shepherds
Metaphor for collapse of the world’s powers
Shepherds will wail because their glory will be spoiled
11:4-14 Rejection of the good shepherd
Earlier shepherds neglected flock, let them flounder
Prophet tries to be good shepherd
Flock scorns him until he puts them out
to pasture
Takes two staffs – calls them Grace,
Unity
Got rid of other bad shepherds
Flock still didn’t appreciate anything
good shepherd did
Broke his staff called Grace
Signified end of relationship, asked for
his pay (30 pieces of silver)
Broke his staff called Unity
Signified end of brotherhood
11:15-17 Rise of worthless shepherd
People finally get what they deserve
Shepherd who doesn’t care about them
(Seems to be metaphor acknowledging that at one time they had bad rulers. But when a good ruler came, the people rejected him. So they got what they deserved – another bad ruler.) |
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| 12:1-14-21 |
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Second Oracle: Deliverance of Jerusalem |
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12:1-13:9 Siege of Jerusalem
12:1-9 Cleansing of foreign invaders
“In that day” there will be an attack
against Jerusalem
Unbeknownst to enemies, God will
have made city impenetrable
Conquering armies will experience calamities
Victory will go to Judah
Those who attack Judah are really attacking God
12:10-14 Mourning over beloved martyr whom
they have “pierced”
(Don’t know exactly who this “martyr” is)
God will give them a spirit of
compassion
Entire city will mourn, even the very land will mourn
Individual houses will mourn
13:1-9 Beginning of hope – Purification of
people, prophets, and leaders
13:1 Inhabitants and house of David will have opportunity to purify themselves
Image of a fountain with continuous flowing water
Clean flowing water is the very symbol of cleansing
13:2-6 Idols, false prophets will be cut
out of the land
Prophecy will end because so many did it badly
People would avoid becoming prophets at all costs
Result would be a return to pure faith
13:7-9 False shepherds would also be eliminated
Some sheep would be lost in
the process, only 1/3 will survive
Those who survive will be like metal purified by fire -- stronger
They will see the day when God claims them as his people
14:1-21 Return of the Messiah – Apocalyptic Finale
Apocalypse puts Jerusalem at center of world history
Before God can appear in all His glory, earth must go through birth pangs
14:1-2 Conflict gathers around Jerusalem
Nations of the world have united to destroy
it
14:3-15 The Lord enters the battle
As the divine warrior (the Messiah), He
will deliver His people
Cosmic upheavals turn tide
Victory will go to Jerusalem
The Lord will establish His kingdom over the whole world
Israel’s enemies will be punished
14:16-21 Survivors will come to know the Lord
They will come to Jerusalem to participate in worship
The characterization of the messianic kingdom will be in holiness
All uncleanness will be removed; all will
be clean
There will be no distinction between
clean and unclean
People will have a new sense of God’s presence, power |
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Zechariah ends his book with attention towards proper worship and the role of the priesthood in bringing people to God. In this messianic age, the temple will play a bigger part in the lives of everyone. Knowing that God is in the temple will inform every detail of their lives. In a deep way, this understanding of the temple fulfils Haggai’s prophecy that this temple will surpass all others. It might not have the material splendor of Solomon’s, but in Zechariah’s view it will be spiritually superior because it will assure the people that their entire city is sacred – as well as the world beyond it. Everything will be sacred. This sacred canopy will also extend over Gentiles as they come to the city to worship. From the Jerusalem temple, then, God is reaching out to bless the whole world. God will simply be All in all. |
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Other books featured this month: Haggai and Malachi. |
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Bibliography
Craigie, Peter. “Twelve Prophets.” Daily Study Bible Series. Philadelphia, PA: Westminster Press, 1984.
Gaebelein, Frank. “Zechariah.” Expositor’s Bible Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan Publishing, 1985.
Mills, Watson and Richard Wilson. Mercer Commentary on the Bible. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 1995.
Redditt, Paul. “Haggai, Zechariah, Malachi.” The New Century Bible Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm B Eerdmans, 1995.
Smith, Ralph. “Micah-Malachi.” Word Biblical Commentary. Dallas, TX: Word Books, 1984.
Stuhlmueller, Carroll. “Haggai & Zechariah.” The New International Theological Commentary. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm B Eerdmans, 1988.
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